tv [untitled] August 5, 2021 10:30pm-11:01pm AST
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so you can come back home because on the tv, this is a lot of the worst about use it. you have some mental health problems and maybe you can go to the hospital and you know, i feel myself much better here. i feel the same and 2 and a lot of people support me here. and my husband, he is already in a road bike, hard to support them. so i read him today and he will be here maybe with me. so i just waiting on a quick look at the main stories now. and rebels from if your peers will turn region of pig ry of taking control of langley baler, unesco wild heritage site. it lies in the region and it's really a sacred sight of pilgrimage for millions of christians. it's fame for it's 12 century rocking churches. fighting into gray has spilled into neighboring regions
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in recent weeks, causing thousands of people to flee the violence. malcolm web has more from nairobi who resident and others have told us the fighters from the detroit region of entered the historic town loudly better. there were rumors that they were close local residents over the last week, some of the residents that they've had gunfire at night, but they say normal to, to have some gunfire at night there. but in just in the last few hours, resident said they could see the grand people's liberation from fighters getting close. and then just to show while ago they've taken control of the town. and had 24 soldiers have been killed and attacked by suspected broke her arm fighters. it happened on an island in the lake chad region harassment rival splinter group has been using the area to launch attacks in chad and neighboring countries. last year, east, a 100 chaldean troops were killed in an assault by the armed groups,
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out fire fuel by heat wave, a raging and grease with 3 blazes burning on the island of elvia that but no dest. so injuries, but there is widespread destruction. greece is prime minister, has warned of even more difficult days ahead with wind full cost to strengthen and there are $52.00 in the united states with one blaze, wiping out much of a community in northern california. most of greenville central business district has been destroyed, with st. lights melting in the extreme heat. and in iran, you president there is taken office with a direct position on us sanctions and countries, nuclear ambitions. abraham rice, he said he would take steps to lift the sanctions, which have devastated his country's economy. and he insisted that the iranian nuclear program is for peaceful purposes as he entered the office at a time of heightened regional tensions. the stream is the program coming up. next i will see you in about half an hour time. stay with us.
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me. ah, ah ah ah ah. hi, anthony ok today on the stream, one of the most dangerous countries in the world for women pakistan. let's take a look at some statistics. 11 rape cases are registered every day in pakistan with over 22000 rate cases, reported to police across the country in the past 6 years. to 13 women happy murdered in the name of honor every day in pakistan. and it is the 2nd was country
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in the world in terms of gender equality. so what can pakistan do to tackle sexual violence against women? that is the question. we are asking you on youtube. you're part of this conversation. the comment section is right. there was nothing to take part in this conversation. so we're going to get started with our legal peer. he is an app, so he's a comedian. he is a wrapper, well known for his social comment tray. what's happening in pakistan right now is not a good thing is, is it young kids being raped or woman being read can be had to it it's, it's scary. i'm a man, i'm still scared. i can't imagine what women are feeling and it's we need to make this right. and what, who is the culprit is the man is the man do all these, you know, bad things and all these. and we need to take responsibility. helping us navigate
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this conversational leah come warmer leeker. thank you so much for joining us. aliya. introduce yourself to the stream audience. hi, my name is holly, right, and i'm supposed to have you come, we're welcome to the stream. tell everybody who you well and what you do. hi, my name is emily, and i mean can, we can talk to one of the nice to have here. abilene, i welcome to the stream. please introduce yourself to international viewers. hi everyone. my name is monique. hi, i'm a member of parliament and i'm also parliamentary secretary for justice in but thank you all for joining us. i'm going to say to our audience that we're going to be talking about sexual violence against women. if you have been impacted by sexual violence in any way, i want to let you know so that you can decide what you want to watch right now. or if you need to move away from the screen. this is important because i'm going to
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talk about, nor mcaden aaliyah. you're going to help us understand this story. why it made news in a country where there are lots of cases of sexual violence against women. why did no story stand out? what happened? when you look at the murder that happened in the capital of the country, and it's what is it being it's absolutely should be headed off to being tortured and murdered. it also happened in a part of the fire tv which sells for people to close to home. we've been hearing about actually violence against women are generally against women. for years and years it's been, you know, you have it in the print, you have it or the media. it gets a couple of lines and small boxes of newspapers, but more and more so in past years, it's been a tremendous amount of an effort being made in newsrooms by people and certain amount of awareness where women more and more. and this case has shopped the entire nation because of the brutality of that. and just because of how horrific nickel
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was shot. yeah, absolutely. i think the murder of normal got done was shocking. it was a booty motor that went shock waves across the san and it's induced most fear among the women of a women and go to the state, came out with a strong message or the state parties including the police, took bass going action because with electric offender is now in prison. he's being investigated, he's being prosecuted. and if i mr. come out with a base strong plan message. in one of his wife interviews we've spoken about how discuss it will not be able to evade the system. i think that's the kind of messaging we require in cases of crimes against women that the pocket on the state
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and the government of basketball at all times. gone by the victims of fine. let me bring in the pakistan piano. iran con. this is what he said on a us bull cough. pbf news our about where he was asked about his, his thoughts about women and how before because if they all and if they would ever be the reason why they would be a victim. so he was asked that question quite diary, why did you say that? he said he was taken out of context and then he said some more. take a look. no matter whatever. hum, how much ever a woman is provocative or whatever. she wears the, the person who commits great, he is fully responsible, but you look at the situation of pakistan even now. i mean look at the rape cases. yeah. compared to western country. minuscule compared to them. yes, we have issues. we have the culture problems every nation has that. but that comes
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with cultural level lucian with education. but as far as a woman's dignity goes respect, i can say office going all over the world. this society gives more respect and dignity to women. how is that an experience you have in pakistan, a very respectful society towards women? i would say, you know her eyes when a woman walks on the streets, how many women do we see in regular public places and how safe are women in their home? and they live in cases like the ones we've seen recently where the other young woman was burned by her mother, mother and gretel envelope, who was murdered by a man. because pick me where near the bottom of the whirling manor form, global gender index, and 90 percent of women and blackest on face domestic wine and had only 0.4 percent of them after the go ahead and reported. because the shame surrounding her boarding
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a crime against a woman and especially for sexual in nature. so it's easy to see a bit women and bothers on a respected, but i really do women focus on respect. they do. they even feel it. i don't think so. and you know, to just say and actual stories of women speak otherwise. well, i'm going to bringing i youtube audience here. this is from right. i mean, you are, you, you go 1st and i'm going to put some thought to you as well, but i'll go 1st. i believe i would want to know, you know, this is something that we've all been questioning is that the domestic violence bill was actually popped over to the constantly conduct, the ology and it wasn't passed by holding the majority of the national assembly. is that something you can talk about? can you explain to us why that was happened? why did the domestic violence still not get to that very important
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question and we talk about domestic violence. and then i want to come back in about one bucket fund because i think we need to put the record straight on that in terms of the domestic violence. obviously, you know that it was off by the national assembly. it went to the upper house in the senate and in the senate it was put to debate and there was disagreement on the ground to the off the bill and it was a. ringback motive debate device debate on the issue, the human rights ministry of pocket found opportunity. medina came out and she actually defended the domestic violence bill very well. now, the government had constitutional option where the constitutional option to seek input from the council of stomach ideology, which is a constitutional body on whether any provision of domestic violence law violates principles of syria islamic law. monica before we can before we got people
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into that, can you tell us what the key to the domestic violence bill will be and how that will stop more people more women from being attacked from being harassed from being murdered? i'm so if any office phone has been a stick one floor across all the problems, we haven't been, we haven't been job. we haven't covered all. and i've got to take the only partial pockets on which did not have a domestic violence before the idea is to criminalize any form of domestic violence . and this bill was not gender specific. you know, it talks about person beyond being a woman or a man, just a wonderful person who would be subjected to any form of physical, emotional or economic abuse. so the, so the main and behind introducing such legislation ensure that women across
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pockets on go the bus pockets on children across buckets on elderly people. anybody who's wonderful at will by the law and box bond has a very strong legal spring. but we have a very good being caught which provides the fences and find it doesn't seem to be working when it doesn't seem to be working when it comes to protecting women on to put your attention back here that that wall. this is a, a protest rally after nor was murdered res beckham, man, i'm reading here. how many hears would it take to paul stopped bill? that is the alleged murderer. so on the streets, women are asking for that to be legal action come, will not make a difference. i think i just want to address with the military said, i think it's actually not the argument with you to talk to them and said they referred to the id. now we might remember that the same counselor has previously
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also stated that it's ok for i've been to beat them eyes. and that just means the irony of the matter why has been that is so simple and meter that, you know, looks to protect women, been working on the history of the building by the thing. and i really what i would love to hear me because it's a struggle for you as a politician, there are so few female politicians that if this a huge bounce will for you, are you battling gender inequality at the same time as you're trying to get gender? equality, you know, for me, when i bought the phone constitutes a more than 50 percent of the population in bottom and we make up 20 percent of the environment. and we do offer legislation with involvement. and so we have adequate opportunities to represent them in a bucket on to deflate,
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to combat gender inequality. and to bring forth legislation that the pix device of women and girls, i knew were having a huge debate on the domestic violence small. and i've already explained how the government, because of a polarized debate emerging on the issue because of different viewpoints coming for the use. it's constitutional mandate defend the bills become to the family party honestly. and i don't know of any form of precedent in just a counseling tommy ideology, actually formerly a stated that women should be beating all women should be home. so i don't recall any such thing. but all i want to say if the government focused on the ministry of justice is not a very important and tv flow that we're not talking about right now. you know, we're discussing rape. we're discussing fiction violence, but we're not discussing the most important law, which is establishing special board, which is ensuring that files get completed in full month. you can showing that
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medical legal evidence is a better manner, which is ensuring that any evidence which goes to discredit a woman who is not listening to all of these things happening and focus on ok. i just want to on that one point on, on a minute, i'm going to move us along. i q, u, i have your position. of course you are representing the current governments that you are going to be promoting. all the things that you feel that you are doing that are effective and yet we see the number of women who are still facing violence in pakistan. i'm going to move with on a little bit earlier, allow me to move us on bennett shaw. the features editor of g o t v. and i'm wondering if the issue of sexual violence against women is being treated with jew seriousness. he's been as he is point. let's have a look in the past couple of weeks ago, a very senior minister,
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a very senior member of the ruling party, addressed as alien bucks done with housings of people attended. and over there he joked about lapping a female politician who was from a rival political party, and no action was taken against him. they were no consequences. so then needs to be a clear message from the government that massage any 6 of them will not be tolerated within the parliament or outside of the parliament. and that message has not come across when it is vain being very careful, they should not mentioning any names. aaliyah you are not in your head. i am wondering about the example being set from the top a back pocket from the leadership from the politicians. are you go fast? yeah, the thing is that, you know, what i think is very funny, that is 222 percent roughly about 20 to 30 percent representation. the part of the cabinet is for women out of 53 people in order to make things better for women,
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there needs to be better female representation. monica was part of a press conference not too long ago with a couple of other emanates, talking about how prime minister kind of a women empowerment. but don't we need more women representing the country when way we are 50 percent of the country. let me think, i want to add some things on yes. go ahead and we think about the guns and if it's not a good idea, how many women are on that thing? i mean, women get the johns to be fathers on the concert and contribute to such a domestic violence. let me bring in some thought from youtube. what was commenting on everything you're saying guess fill a doro says the case is in pakistan, are not miniscule compared to the west. how many do not get reported can, will quick response to that. as i mentioned earlier, and 90 percent, women of the thing, domestic violence and 0.4 percent of them actually reported me on the very correctly. the bed is also because of this shaming associated around the weekend,
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occupying the very patriarchal society in domestic wine into something more cool up internalizing environment. i think to the point it becomes something that we're going to justify and are going to need not to interfere when the business abuse. so when you think about that, if you see a man beating a life in front of you within the streets, nobody is going to come and stop them. and as a community leader, i will miss 1000000 conversations between women every single month, much of which i around domestic so undergraduate never or media and then again are leadership. and then i really just part leaders also mainstream, the patriarchal violent view, and it had me come in person as you any way to religious you, gender discrimination. and most importantly, i do want to hear that those who are in abuse department, they know they couldn't get away with it because the primary thing or, or if you have been to stablish protection or even hold accountable perpetrators of
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violence against women. monica on youtube legislation isn't a solution. implementation is a solution and also at the anti rate law hasn't passed yet. so implementation is, is more than issue, right? you can have all the law you can have can i just go back to talking about the actual volume and stuff that we've spoken about in this interview. the 2 other panelists have to talk about increasing sexual violence and bucket bundle punch. lee focused on this, not the country with the highest number of cases of reported, great affection one, the other countries across the globe. and there's a global rise in sexual violence against women. do the world health organizations report with one in 3 women, 30 percent globally have at some point been subjected to fiction,
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violence or physical violence in the lifetime? and then if you look around the world, you will see that countries like usa have a rate rate of 27.3 percent and 97 percent of the usa for a walk in the u. k. has had the lowest number of convictions in rape as we speak of, but it will not make me feel good if i was watching in pakistan. i wouldn't. oh ok . system of women around the world are also getting right. got would know. you would, you know, like, i don't understand. yeah. i understand like i can your point, but he doesn't address the problem in pakistan. you're just sharing it around the well let me, let me bring it in and get him to talk about would be an efficient. i'll go back to it. i'm ready to move on. melissa, thank you so much. we only have a little bit of time. we've got a lot to packing. this is a very important person. i want to be part of this conversation. i name is jeff fac, she is a friend of, nor she was a friend of nor, and when she spoke to us earlier,
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this is what she told us. how to look. when i heard about what had happened to a friend nor i was shocked and i'm still in drama. it inflicted ality because he knew to the news. but what this to happen to someone talk to has been so devastating. you know, not only impacted the friends or family of 2, but it is effective in di nation. and i believe that the property does job should be given capital punishment because it is now the time that a president must be set for the future that people cannot get away with these crimes and adjust to, to do so when the war and for all other victims to close to the item data from the side in bucket thought. shop. make suggestion about capital punishment. it's something that our audience are also thinking about. bring the death penalty to every man who uses any form of extreme religious beliefs to torture main injure or
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kill a woman. aaliyah. do you think that is a popular sentiment in pakistan? the death penalty is that's the way to deal with sexual violence against women. i think everybody's need your reaction is that death penalty should be implemented to new cases. but i would go so hard to say that has a capital punishment for rates. it really helped bennett who was murdered in less than a trash her basis was, you know, when he got the death penalty has it made a difference. we've had cases of rape in children's rape. and i'll go so far to say that we're talking about genocide and, but there is a huge conversation that needs to happen about violence on boys as well. and then, racist and motor was also somebody who was actually abuse of the child. where does this partial ends really? why, what are we going to talk about restoration justice? are we going to talk about, you know, if there's other ways to deal with things?
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why are they not math campaign happening about gender based violence and just sexual violence? and what happens inside seminaries, there was a video that was leaked not long ago about, you know, you base senior politician, you know, belongs to a prominent party with an alliance with a part of what is happening. why don't they know my campaign? we've, we've invited westerners to come for tourism and part of why are they not mass campaign talking to the mass public about sexual violence being about why is there no accountability for that? i want to bring in one more thought here, and i think this one is, is a, is a big one. and it's really about how the men and women view themselves in pakistan . i cannot comment on this, but i'm going to bring in stuff come, well, she's a super model. she's from pakistan as she has very firm views on men and women's role. and maybe this will give us a little insight into how do you even address cultural change when young
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people have faith beliefs like this one is have a look that have a listen. i how i manage on the go to it is our husband. i married him, which means i have to pick up his shoes and iron his clothes. i know where all of those things are and walked and when he has to eat, i need to know these things because i am his wife. and i am a woman. he doesn't have to know the same about me. this is what i believe because this is what i've grown up seen this feminism that has become a part of our lives. it's because of liberals. they shared the model that was a very popular sentiment that went viral that, that whole conversation. and there was a lot of support for that conversation. i am bringing no judgment here, but i am showing that with our audience so that they have a better view of where the cultural conversation is happening in pakistan. if i
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wanted to ask you in a sentence, guess because we've talked about this for quite a while now, what would be the one thing that you would pio, it's rise in terms of tackling sexual violence. it is one thing i will ask malika, come will aaliyah one thing, ladies. malika please go 1st. also me is problem, interest people and justice. it would be implementation of the law enforcement of the law at all levels and synthesizing on duty. barriers of police force are prosecution to the needs of women and go with pockets on ensuring victims. monica, thank you so much for bringing the perspective from the government. appreciate you . come on. one thing. i think it would be educated and making resources available at a very graph number for everybody around i'm a thank you for being in our conversation today. aaliyah,
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what would be your priority to address sexual violence against women in pakistan? i have to, he would come to expect education and awareness and gender sensitivity to me. you know, when, when it comes to implementing the law, we're talking about police force, we're talking by law enforcement agencies. they need to understand that filing, you know, a report, women cannot be turned away. there has to be awareness, but these things have to do, but aaliyah come war malika, thank you so much for being in this conversation. i realize that 25 minutes, you know, even close to being long enough for us to address this, but thank you for helping us pack the conversation that is happening in pakistan today. instagram, excuse me, if you're on youtube. thank you for your comments and your questions. i appreciate you, i will see you next time. take everybody ah
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or small to continue the change all around the shape by technology and human ingenuity we can make it work for you and your the on mariam demising london with a quick round up of the headlines now to grind rebels of seas control of the ancient ethiopian town of labella is a significant sight for millions of orthodox christians in the country and recent days and weeks, the conflict virus spread, forcing tens of thousands of people to leave their homes. g p l fighters have targeted the strategically significant afar region of ethiopia. they've also been in an horror, which is the town where the baylor is located for the rebels. this is a symbolic.
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